Difference between revisions of "Sexual life"

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==[[:Category: Freudian Dictionary|Freudian Dictionary]]==
 
==[[:Category: Freudian Dictionary|Freudian Dictionary]]==
  
<blockquote>The sexual life of the human being does not develop in progressive fashion from incipience to maturity, as in the case of most of the closely related animals, but it suffers an abrupt interruption after an initial early florescence extending to about the fifth year, after which it commences anew with puberty, dovetailing, as it were, with the tendencies of the infantile period.<ref>{{PoA}} Ch. 10</ref></blockquote>
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<blockquote>The [[sexual]] [[life]] of the [[human]] [[being]] does not develop in progressive fashion from incipience to maturity, as in the [[case]] of most of the closely related animals, but it suffers an abrupt interruption after an initial early florescence extending to [[about]] the fifth year, after which it commences anew with [[puberty]], dovetailing, as it were, with the tendencies of the [[infantile]] period.<ref>{{PoA}} Ch. 10</ref></blockquote>
  
 
===Sexual Life and Civilization===
 
===Sexual Life and Civilization===
<blockquote>The sexual life of civilized man is seriously disabled, whatever we may say; it sometimes makes an impression of being a function in process of becoming atrophied, just as organs like our teeth and our hair seem to be.<ref>{{C&D}} Ch. 4</ref></blockquote>
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<blockquote>The sexual life of [[civilized]] man is seriously disabled, whatever we may say; it sometimes makes an impression of being a function in [[process]] of becoming atrophied, just as organs like our teeth and our hair seem to be.<ref>{{C&D}} Ch. 4</ref></blockquote>
  
  
 
{{Freudian Dictionary}}
 
{{Freudian Dictionary}}
 
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Latest revision as of 23:04, 20 May 2019

Freudian Dictionary

The sexual life of the human being does not develop in progressive fashion from incipience to maturity, as in the case of most of the closely related animals, but it suffers an abrupt interruption after an initial early florescence extending to about the fifth year, after which it commences anew with puberty, dovetailing, as it were, with the tendencies of the infantile period.[1]

Sexual Life and Civilization

The sexual life of civilized man is seriously disabled, whatever we may say; it sometimes makes an impression of being a function in process of becoming atrophied, just as organs like our teeth and our hair seem to be.[2]

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